In a hurry
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is x ī nm á ngy ì J í, which means still flustered. In the heart flustered, confused idea. From Lao Jun Tang.
Idiom explanation
I'm still in a panic. In the heart flustered, confused idea.
The origin of Idioms
The rise and fall of the rich and the poor. The first discount: looking at the shadow of the sun and the west, and gradually falling gold and black, Pan Gu village is in a hurry and has a hard way to tell who?
The first fold of Zheng Guangzu's Lao Jun Tang in Yuan Dynasty: "seeing a man crying out for a sudden sign (Ma Wan), I was in a hurry to return the horse. I was in a hurry to look forward to it." Yuan · Liu Tingxin's "new water order · spring hate" divertimento: "I'll be in a hurry for a while
Idiom usage
Examples
The man was afraid of missing his official business, so he had to weigh five coins. The 16th chapter of the romance of Fengshen by Xu Zhonglin in Ming Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : xīn máng yì jí
In a hurry
Double axe felling solitary trees. shuāng fǔ fá gū shù
The speaker is earnest, the listener is contemptuous. yán zhě zhūn zhūn,tīng zhě miǎo miǎo